Stratospheric Flight: Aeronautics at the Limit: Springer Praxis Books
Autor Andras Sóbesteren Limba Engleză Paperback – iul 2011
The second part of the book tackles the aeronautical problems of flying in the upper atmosphere. What loads does stratospheric flight place on pressurized cabins at high altitude and why are these difficult to predict? What determines the maximum altitude an aircraft can climb to? What is the 'coffin corner' and how can it be avoided? The history of aviation has seen a handful of airplanes reach altitudes in excess of 70,000 feet - what are the extreme engineering challenges of climbing into the upper stratosphere? Flying high makes very high speeds possible -- what are the practical limits?
The key advantage of stratospheric flight is that the aircraft will be 'above the weather' - but is this always the case? Part three of the book investigates the extreme atmospheric conditions that may be encountered in the upper atmosphere. How high can a storm cell reach and what is it like to fly into one? How frequent is high altitude 'clear air' turbulence, what causes it and what are its effects on aircraft? The stratosphere can be extremely cold - how cold does it have to be before flight becomes unsafe? What happens when an aircraft encounters volcanic ash at high altitude? Very highwinds can be encountered at the lower boundary of the stratosphere - what effect do they have on aviation?
Finally, part four looks at the extreme limits of stratospheric flight. How high will a winged aircraft will ever be able to fly? What are the ultimate altitude limits of ballooning? What is the greatest altitude that you could still bail out from? And finally, what are the challenges of exploring the stratospheres of other planets and moons?
The author discusses these and many other questions, the known knowns, the known unkonwns and the potential unknown unknowns of stratospheric flight through a series of notable moments of the recent history of mankind's forays into the upper atmospheres, each of these incidents, accidents or great triumphs illustrating a key aspect of what makes stratospheric flight aviation at the limit.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781441994578
ISBN-10: 1441994572
Pagini: 240
Ilustrații: XXIV, 215 p. 76 illus., 30 illus. in color.
Dimensiuni: 168 x 240 x 17 mm
Greutate: 0.41 kg
Ediția:2011
Editura: Praxis
Colecția Praxis
Seriile Springer Praxis Books, Popular Science
Locul publicării:New York, NY, United States
ISBN-10: 1441994572
Pagini: 240
Ilustrații: XXIV, 215 p. 76 illus., 30 illus. in color.
Dimensiuni: 168 x 240 x 17 mm
Greutate: 0.41 kg
Ediția:2011
Editura: Praxis
Colecția Praxis
Seriile Springer Praxis Books, Popular Science
Locul publicării:New York, NY, United States
Public țintă
Popular/generalCuprins
Preface.- Acknowledgements.- About the author.- Prologue.- Millimeters of mercury.- Part I: In a hostile environment.- Chapter 1: A sense of not belonging.- Chapter 2: Comfort Zone.- Part II: New heights of flight.- Chapter 3: A tale of two Comets.- Chapter 4: Higher.- Chapter 5: Faster.- Part III: 'Above the weather'.- Chapter 6: Deep freeze.- Chapter 7: Rivers of air.- Chapter 8: Rough ride.- Chapter 9: A gray area.- Part IV: Where next?.- Chapter 10: Higher still.- V. Appendices.- Chapter 11: Unit conversions.- Chapter 12: Temperature profiles around the globe.- References.- Index.
Recenzii
"I have put in many hours looking out of airliner windows, even more in aircraft design offices and years test flying but this book fascinated me and taught me a lot." - John Farley
Notă biografică
Dr. Andras Sobester is an aerospace engineering lecturer at the University of Southampton in the Faculty of Engineering and the Environment. He holds a Research Fellowship funded by the Royal Academy of Engineering and the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research council. The remit of the Fellowship is to investigate technologies for the reduction of the environmental impact of the next generation of passenger airliners. In particular, his research is aimed at the design of airframe surfaces for minimizing the noise footprint of aircraft, while maintaining their performance.
His other research areas include high altitude flight (including lighter-than-air systems), the multi-disciplinary design optimization of aircraft, the mathematical description of geometries used in aerospace engineering, as well as machine learning technologies underpinning the use of high fidelity computer simulations in aircraft design.
His other research areas include high altitude flight (including lighter-than-air systems), the multi-disciplinary design optimization of aircraft, the mathematical description of geometries used in aerospace engineering, as well as machine learning technologies underpinning the use of high fidelity computer simulations in aircraft design.
Textul de pe ultima copertă
The stratosphere is the highest layer of Earth's atmosphere where aircraft can still fly. The density of the air is just high enough here to generate lift on a wing or buoyancy on a balloon, so designing any stratospheric aircraft is a delicate technological balancing act for the engineer. Designing and operating an aircraft capable of conveying humans to the stratosphere is more challenging still: biologically, we simply do not belong up there. Temperatures often as low as -80C (-112F) and an ambient pressure rapidly diminishing with altitude make for an extremely forbidding environment. In fact, as we pass 50 000 feet (the lower end of Concorde's cruising altitude range), we enter the space equivalent zone - from a physiological point of view we might as well be in low Earth orbit.
The fact that stratospheric flight is possible at all - moreover, even safe and economical, at least in the lower stratosphere - is made possible by some relatively recent advances in our understanding of the science of high altitude flight. This book charts some of these developments; at the same time, it is a catalog of ways in which the stratosphere can catch out even the well-prepared flyer. Naturally, the failures of early explorers have signposted many of these dangers, but, as regular news headlines and the series of vignettes that punctuate the book illustrate, the learning curve has not levelled off, it has merely become shallower. Stratospheric flight is still aviation at the limit.
The fact that stratospheric flight is possible at all - moreover, even safe and economical, at least in the lower stratosphere - is made possible by some relatively recent advances in our understanding of the science of high altitude flight. This book charts some of these developments; at the same time, it is a catalog of ways in which the stratosphere can catch out even the well-prepared flyer. Naturally, the failures of early explorers have signposted many of these dangers, but, as regular news headlines and the series of vignettes that punctuate the book illustrate, the learning curve has not levelled off, it has merely become shallower. Stratospheric flight is still aviation at the limit.
Caracteristici
Includes actual accounts of famous and infamous flights and milestone events in the history of stratospheric flight Gives detailed analysis of the science behind stratospheric flight Conveys in a non-technical way the challenges and trade-offs of stratospheric flight Presents original research that debunks myths and clarifies many widely misunderstood facts and events